š° Full Story
Republican leaders and President Donald Trump signalled a two-track strategy on April 2 to end a nearly seven-week partial shutdown at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) while keeping pressure to secure long-term funding for immigration enforcement.
Senate and House leaders John Thune and Mike Johnson announced they will first push a bipartisan Senate bill to fund most DHS components ā including the Coast Guard, FEMA, CISA and support staff ā while excluding Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and much of Customs and Border Protection (CBP). Republicans plan to pursue financing for ICE and Border Patrol separately through budget reconciliation, a party-line route that could be completed by the June 1 deadline Trump has set.
Trump also said he will sign an executive order to pay DHS employees immediately; he previously used a similar order to restore pay for Transportation Security Administration workers amid severe airport delays.
The House held only brief pro forma sessions on Thursday and took no substantive action, leaving the timing of final votes uncertain as many lawmakers remain on recess.
GOP infighting and procedural limits on reconciliation create risks for the planās swift implementation and full resolution of the funding lapse.
š Based On
The Washington Times stories: PoliticsTrump plans to sign order to pay all DHS employees
TheWeek feedGOP leaders unveil plan to end DHS shutdown
š¤ Social Media Insights
Social Summary
The discussion is mainly partisan reaction and interpretation of the announced two-track funding plan; commenters echo existing reporting and offer opinions rather than new, verifiable facts or corrections.
š°ļø The Story So Far: An Evolving Timeline
Thursday, April 2, 2026 16:35 UTC
GOP, Trump Move To End DHS Shutdown
Wednesday, April 1, 2026 07:49 UTC
GOP civil war over DHS funding deepens








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